Langston Hughes
Poet and writer Langston Hughes, famous for his elucidations of black American life in his poems, stories, autobiographies, and histories, was born in Joplin, Missouri, on February 1, 1902.
I’ve known rivers:I’ve known rivers ancient as the world and older than the flow of human blood in human veins.My soul has grown deep like the rivers.Langston Hughes, “The Negro Speaks of Rivers .”
Hughes’ parents separated shortly after he was born, and he spent much of his childhood in the company of his grandmother in Lawrence, Kansas. She filled his imagination with stories, such as the tale of her first husband Sheridan Leary, a freedman who went to Harper’s Ferry in 1859 to fight alongside abolitionist John Brown.
Hughes’s poem “The Negro Speaks of Rivers,” written the summer after he graduated from high school in Cleveland, Ohio, was published in Crisis, the magazine of the NAACP, in 1921. After attending Columbia University for a brief time, Hughes spent several years working odd jobs and traveling abroad. His reputation received a boost in 1925 when Hughes, who was working as a busboy at the Wardman Hotel in Washington, D.C., slipped three poems into the satchel of guest Vachel Lindsay who was famous for his public readings or performances of poetry. Lindsay’s enthusiastic rendition of and response to Hughes’s hastily written poems led to a scholarship at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania. By 1930, Hughes had earned his degree from Lincoln and published two collections of poetry and one work of prose.
Hughes is closely associated with the Harlem Renaissance or New Negro Movement, a flourishing of artistic expression that emerged from the community of Harlem in New York City in the 1920s. Critic Carl Van Vechten recognized early the fresh approach of the writers of the Harlem Renaissance and the importance of the addition of African-American voices to literature. The Van Vechten Collection includes portraits of many of Hughes’s contemporaries in the movement, such as Countee Cullen, Arna Bontemps, author of Drums at Dusk, and writer and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston.
Words and Deeds in American History: Selected Documents Celebrating the Manuscript Division’s First 100 Years features drafts of Langston Hughes’ poem, “The Ballad of Booker T.” In this 1941 poem, Hughes writes sympathetically of educator Booker T. Washington, whose reputation remains a subject of controversy and debate.
In collaboration with Kurt Weill and Elmer Rice, Hughes also created the opera Street Scene. Originally developed by Rice as a play, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Street Scene was first performed in 1929. Based on a libretto by Rice, the operatic version of Street Scene opened on Broadway in 1947, with music by Weill and lyrics by Hughes.
Langston Hughes died in 1967. Among his most well known works are The Weary Blues, a 1926 collection of poetry; The Ways of White Folks, a 1934 collection of short stories; The Big Sea, an autobiography of his early life, published in 1940; and the 1956 A Pictorial History of the Negro in America.
Learn More
- Learn more about the experience of African-Americans in Hughes’s childhood home of Kansas in the feature on Nicodemus, Kansas, part of The African-American Mosaic: A Library of Congress Resource Guide for the Study of Black History & Culture.
- See The Harlem Renaissance and the Flowering of Creativity, part of the online exhibition The African American Odyssey: A Quest for Full Citizenship, to learn about other creative artists and writers of the period.
- Search on the term Elmer Rice in Posters: WPA Posters to see posters advertising plays by Rice. See, for example, a poster for a 1938 production of “Counsellor at Law.” To learn more about Rice’s involvement with the Federal Theater Project read “Federal Theatre: Melodrama, Social Protest, and Genius.”
- See the items featured in the categories Arts and Literature and African-American History and Culture in the collection Words and Deeds in American History: Selected Documents Celebrating the Manuscript Division’s First 100 Years.
- Click on Harlem and Hughes in Primary Source Investigation – Harlem Renaissance from Song of America Project for more resources.
- Search the Poetry & Literature Center at the Library of Congress blog “From the Catbird Seat,” to find numerous postings related to Langston Hughes.
- In honor of Langston Hughes’s 110th birthday in February 2012, the Library of Congress hosted a Literary Birthday Celebration. View the webcast to share in the activities.
Victor Herbert
Victor Herbert was born on February 1, 1859, in Dublin, Ireland. He studied music in Germany, where he became a cellist and composer for the court in Stuttgart and joined the faculty of the Stuttgart Conservatory of Music. In 1886, he and his wife, opera singer Therese Foerster, immigrated to New York where they worked for the Metropolitan Opera and became active in the musical life of the city.
Toyland, Toyland,
Little girl and boy land
While you dwell within it
You are ever happy then.Childhood’s Joy land,
Mystic, merry Toyland,
Once you pass its borders
You can never return again.Babes in Toyland. Book and lyrics by Glen MacDonough; Music by Victor Herbert, 1903.
Herbert, a composer of symphonic music and chamber string pieces, joined the faculty of the National Conservatory of Music. In 1893, he became bandmaster of the 22nd Regiment Band of New York after the death of the celebrated Patrick S. Gilmore, “Father of the American Band.” Herbert wrote a number of marches while he was the band’s conductor.
From 1898 to 1904 he directed the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra and then formed the Victor Herbert Orchestra which performed lighter music. Herbert was most famous as a composer of light operetta. Between 1894 and 1924 he composed more than forty comic operettas which had lengthy runs on Broadway and on tour around the country. His best known remains Babes in Toyland, which opened in 1903, a fantasy inspired by Frank L. Baum’s popular The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
Other popular operettas composed by Herbert included The Serenade, The Fortune Teller, Mlle. Modiste, The Red Mill, and Naughty Marietta. All were characterized by frothy romantic plots with happy endings.
The music from Herbert’s theatrical pieces became standard recital repertory pieces and his instrumental waltzes were popular dance music. Later in his life Herbert wrote for musical revues such as the Ziegfeld Follies.
Through his friendship with Thomas Edison, Herbert was one of the first to record his music on the newly invented phonograph. He made and issued early recordings of some of his works in orchestral versions, including “Petite Valse,” “American Fantasie,” and “Indian Summer.”
Herbert wrote a full symphonic score for the film The Fall of a Nation, which premiered in New York on June 6, 1916. This was to have been the first complete original score written to accompany an American film (earlier film scores tended to combine new music with older pieces) but Victor L. Schertzinger’s original score for the Thomas Ince film Civilization premiered in Los Angeles on April 17. For many years only disparate segments of Herbert’s score, arranged in no particular order, were available. When a piano score was discovered in the Victor Herbert Collection of the Library’s Music Division it became possible to establish the order of the segments. As a result, a condensed version of the film’s full symphonic score was restored and performed in 1984.
Learn More
- Read about Victor Herbert’s role in the fight for performance rights and royalties in the Today in History feature of February 13 on the founding of the American Society of Composers, Authors, and Publishers (ASCAP).
- Listen to early recordings of Victor Herbert songs. Search on the term Victor Herbert in Emile Berliner and the Birth of the Recording Industry to hear, for example, “The Serenade” from October 9, 1897.
- Search these sheet music collections on Victor Herbert for more examples of Herbert’s compositions:
- Historic Sheet Music Collection, 1800 to 1922
- Music for the Nation: American Sheet Music, ca1870 to 1885
- African-American Sheet Music from the Collections of Brown University
- Read the essay “The American Brass Band Movement,” which includes a quote from Victor Herbert in the section entitled “German, Irish, and Italian Influences.” This material is from Band Music from the Civil War Era, which makes available examples of the brass band music that flourished in the U.S. from the 1850s through the late nineteenth century.
- Browse the typescript of the Ziegfeld Follies of 1919 in the collection The American Variety Stage: Vaudeville and Popular Entertainment, 1870-1920 to find an example of Herbert’s contribution to this extravaganza.
- Search the Performing Arts Encyclopedia on Victor Herbert for sheet music and other information.
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